On the last day of June, Perry Lamb cut a check to Walker County for $3,412 – his qualification fee to be an independent candidate for Commissioner in November.

Today Lamb will submit a petition signed by over 2,100 people to the elections office. If the elections committee certifies 1,650 of those signers as registered Walker County voters, Lamb’s candidacy will become official. That adds his name to the fall ballot against incumbent commissioner Bebe Heiskell and Republican challenger Shannon Whitfield.

For once, voters won’t have to hold their nose and vote for a flawed candidate just because he’s the only one running against Bebe. Lamb’s efforts to run outside the party structure mean voters will have real choices to pick from, not just the lesser of two evils.

About 200 of Lamb’s signatures were collected during LaFayette Freedom Festival on July 4th. Lamb met voters face to face during that event, shaking hands and answering questions while gathering more signatures and general support. Commissioner Heiskell wasn’t there, in body or spirit. Candidate Whitfield had a tent and spokesmen present, but couldn’t be bothered to show up himself.

A Whitfield mouthpiece later said their candidate was out of town all last week for an important family matter, and was still out of town Saturday during a candidate forum at Cedar Grove Community Center that was attended by both Lamb and Commissioner Heiskell.

Nobody can fault Whitfield for prioritizing his family, especially during a holiday week, but Team Whitfield has yet to explain OTHER community events and meetings he’s missed this summer, in Rossville, Villanow, Hinkle, and Fort Oglethorpe – all attended by Perry Lamb.

Is Whitfield skipping events and phoning in his campaign because he assumes he’s got it won, or is he taking a laid back approach because he just doesn’t care? Either way, it’s costing him significant support. (Fortunately, since Lamb is in the race, that support isn’t shifting back to Commissioner Heiskell.)

Stevens was in a group of three cyclist and wiped out on a curve, then was struck by a truck. The cycle’s fuel tank leaked and caught the grass on fire beside the road. A woman and child in the truck were treated for minor injuries.

[Photo courtesy Tyler Bishop]

Thousands of LaFayette electric customers were in the dark for around eight hours on Saturday morning after storms knocked a tree down on a major power line.

City crews worked from about 2 AM to 9:30 AM Saturday to restore electric service; most of those impacted live inside city limits and were none too happy about being left in the hot dark.

Before the room was completely dark, city residents began calling 911 to report the outage and ask when service would be restored. For lack of anything better to do, those calls continued all night and disrupted regular 911 operations for the duration of the blackout.

Gobert’s lawyers argued self defense, but a jury rejected that position – probably because Montgomery and two friends were in a car trying to drive away when Gobert emptied his gun into the vehicle. The spray of fire hit two men, and one – Montgomery – did not survive.

During the last week of June, judge Van Pelt decided not to allow Gobert a chance at freedom after thirty years behind bars, at which point he’ll be 82.

Despite confusion over the state’s rapidly changing fireworks laws (Thanks, Jeff Mullis!), LaFayette’s 4th of July weekend went smoothly with no reported incidents of violence, fire, or injuries.

Now a Chattanooga drunk is in jail, accused of running Dotson down and taking the 28-year-old’s life.

Georgia State Patrol investigators say Tyler Alexander Lemley, 20, was on his way from Signal Mountain to visit a girlfriend when he drunkenly hit Ms. Dotson on the side of Sam Lewis Rd. He’s in the Catoosa jail facing charges of DUI, drug possession, no insurance, no headlights, driving on the wrong side of the road – and homicide by vehicle.

State authorities say the problems are gang related and think inmates may be coordinating their actions behind bars with smuggled phones.

(If that situation sounds like something you’d like to be in the middle of, GA Department of Corrections is conducting job fairs!)

Hays State Prison, which isn’t involved in the lockdown (yet) has a new warden.

Kevin Sprayberry, who moved through the ranks at GA Department of Corrections inside Hays and Walker State Prison, is the Trion prison’s new head. He’s most recently been the warden of Calhoun State Prison.

As you dodge potholes around the county, take time and thank the woman most responsible for the condition of local roads.